From: Shlomi Fish Date: Tue, 18 Aug 2020 06:40:10 +0000 (+0300) Subject: remove files that appear to not be used X-Git-Tag: fortune-mod-2.29.0~7 X-Git-Url: https://granicus.if.org/sourcecode?a=commitdiff_plain;h=112751c365f21673492ed9604323dd89d644d2e9;p=fortune-mod remove files that appear to not be used --- diff --git a/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part1 b/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part1 deleted file mode 100644 index 2de884e..0000000 --- a/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part1 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,238 +0,0 @@ -.\" $NetBSD: fortune.6,v 1.4 1995/03/23 08:28:37 cgd Exp $ -.\" -.\" Copyright (c) 1985, 1991, 1993 -.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. -.\" -.\" This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by -.\" Ken Arnold. -.\" -.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without -.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions -.\" are met: -.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright -.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. -.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright -.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the -.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. -.\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software -.\" must display the following acknowledgement: -.\" This product includes software developed by the University of -.\" California, Berkeley and its contributors. -.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors -.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software -.\" without specific prior written permission. -.\" -.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND -.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE -.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE -.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE -.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL -.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS -.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) -.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT -.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY -.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF -.\" SUCH DAMAGE. -.\" -.\" @(#)fortune.6 8.3 (Berkeley) 4/19/94 -.\" -.\" This version of the man page has been modified heavily, like the -.\" program it documents. Some of the changes may be exclusive to -.\" Linux. Amy A. Lewis, September, 1995. -.\" -.\" Changes Copyright (c) 1997 Dennis L. Clark. All rights reserved. -.\" -.\" The changes in this file may be freely redistributed, modified or -.\" included in other software, as long as both the above copyright -.\" notice and these conditions appear intact. -.\" -.TH FORTUNE 6 "19 April 94 [May. 97]" "BSD Experimental" "UNIX Reference Manual" -.SH NAME -fortune \- print a random, hopefully interesting, adage -.SH SYNOPSIS -.BR fortune " [" -acefilosw "] [" -n -.IR length "] [" -.B -m -.IR pattern "] [[" n% "] " file/dir/all ] -.SH DESCRIPTION -When -.B fortune -is run with no arguments it prints out a random epigram. Epigrams are -divided into several categories, where each category is sub-divided -into those which are potentially offensive and those which are not. -.SS Options -The options are as follows: -.TP -.B -a -Choose from all lists of maxims, both offensive and not. (See the -.B -o -option for more information on offensive fortunes.) -.TP -.B -c -Show the cookie file from which the fortune came. -.TP -.B -e -Consider all fortune files to be of equal size (see discussion below -on multiple files). -.TP -.B -f -Print out the list of files which would be searched, but don't -print a fortune. -.TP -.B -l -Long dictums only. See -.B -n -on how ``long'' is defined in this sense. -.TP -.BI "-m " pattern -Print out all fortunes which match the basic regular expression -.IR pattern . -The syntax of these expressions depends on how your system defines -.BR re_comp "(3) or " regcomp (3), -but it should nevertheless be similar to the syntax used in -.BR grep (1). -.sp -.RS -The fortunes are output to standard output, while the names of the file -from which each fortune comes are printed to standard error. Either or -both can be redirected; if standard output is redirected to a file, the -result is a valid fortunes database file. If standard error is -.I also -redirected to this file, the result is -.IR "still valid" , -.B but there will be ``bogus'' -.BR fortunes , -i.e. the filenames themselves, in parentheses. This can be useful if you -wish to remove the gathered matches from their original files, since each -filename-record will precede the records from the file it names. -.RE -.TP -.BI "-n " length -Set the longest fortune length (in characters) considered to be -``short'' (the default is 160). All fortunes longer than this are -considered ``long''. Be careful! If you set the length too short and -ask for short fortunes, or too long and ask for long ones, fortune goes -into a never-ending thrash loop. -.TP -.B -o -Choose only from potentially offensive aphorisms. The -o option is -ignored if a fortune directory is specified. -.sp -.B Please, please, please request a potentially -.B offensive fortune if and only if -.B you believe, deep in your heart, -.B that you are willing to be -.B offended. (And that you'll just quit -.BR using " -o " rather -.B than give us grief about it, -.B okay?) -.sp -.RS -\&... let us keep in mind the basic governing philosophy of The -Brotherhood, as handsomely summarized in these words: we believe in -healthy, hearty laughter -- at the expense of the whole human race, if -needs be. Needs be. -.RS ---H. Allen Smith, "Rude Jokes" -.RE -.RE -.TP -.B -s -Short apothegms only. See -.B -n -on which fortunes are considered ``short''. -.TP -.B -i -Ignore case for -.IR -m -patterns. -.TP -.B -w -Wait before termination for an amount of time calculated from the -number of characters in the message. This is useful if it is executed -as part of the logout procedure to guarantee that the message can be -read before the screen is cleared. -.PP -The user may specify alternate sayings. You can specify a specific -file, a directory which contains one or more files, or the special word -.I all -which says to use all the standard databases. Any of these may be -preceded by a percentage, which is a number -.I n -between 0 and 100 inclusive, followed by a -.IR % . -If it is, there will be a -.I n -percent probability that an adage will be picked from that file or -directory. If the percentages do not sum to 100, and there are -specifications without percentages, the remaining percent will apply -to those files and/or directories, in which case the probability of -selecting from one of them will be based on their relative sizes. -.PP -As an example, given two databases -.IR funny " and " not-funny ", with " funny -twice as big (in number of fortunes, not raw file size), saying -.RS -.sp -.B fortune -.I funny not-funny -.sp -.RE -will get you fortunes out of -.I funny -two-thirds of the time. The command -.RS -.sp -.B fortune -.RI "90% " funny " 10% " not-funny -.sp -.RE -will pick out 90% of its fortunes from -.I funny -(the ``10% not-funny'' is unnecessary, since 10% is all that's left). -.PP -The -.B -e -option says to consider all files equal; thus -.RS -.sp -.B fortune -e -.I funny not-funny -.sp -.RE -is equivalent to -.RS -.sp -.B fortune -.RI "50% " funny " 50% " not-funny -.sp -.RE -This fortune also supports the BSD method of appending ``-o'' to -database names to specify offensive fortunes. However this is -.B not -how fortune stores them: offensive fortunes are stored in a separate -directory without the ``-o'' infix. A plain name (i.e., not a path to a -file or directory) that ends in ``-o'' will be assumed to be an -offensive database, and will have its suffix stripped off and be -searched in the offensive directory (even if the neither of the -.IR -a " or " -o -options were specified). This feature is not only for -backwards-compatibility, but also to allow users to distinguish between -inoffensive and offensive databases of the same name. -.PP -For example, assuming there is a database named -.I definitions -in both the inoffensive and potentially offensive collections, then the -following command will select an inoffensive definition 90% of the time, -and a potentially offensive definition for the remaining 10%: -.RS -.sp -.B fortune -90% -.I definitions definitions-o -.RE -.SH FILES -Note: these are the defaults as defined at compile time. -.PP -.PD 0 -.TP diff --git a/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part2 b/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part2 deleted file mode 100644 index 94ec49f..0000000 --- a/fortune-mod/fortune/fortune-man.part2 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,64 +0,0 @@ -.PD -.PP -If a particular set of fortunes is particularly unwanted, there is an -easy solution: delete the associated -.I .dat -file. This leaves the data intact, should the file later be wanted, but -since -.B fortune -no longer finds the pointers file, it ignores the text file. -.SH BUGS -The division of fortunes into offensive and non-offensive by directory, -rather than via the `-o' file infix, is not 100% compatible with -original BSD fortune. Although the `-o' infix is recognised as referring -to an offensive database, the offensive database files still need to be -in a separate directory. The workaround, of course, is to move the `-o' -files into the offensive directory (with or without renaming), and to -use the -.B -a -option. -.PP -The supplied fortune databases have been attacked, in order to correct -orthographical and grammatical errors, and particularly to reduce -redundancy and repetition and redundancy. But especially to avoid -repetitiousness. This has not been a complete success. In the process, -some fortunes may also have been lost. -.PP -The fortune databases are now divided into a larger number of smaller -files, some organized by format (poetry, definitions), and some by -content (religion, politics). There are parallel files in the main -directory and in the offensive files directory (e.g., fortunes/definitions and -fortunes/off/definitions). Not all the potentially offensive fortunes are in -the offensive fortunes files, nor are all the fortunes in the offensive -files potentially offensive, probably, though a strong attempt has been -made to achieve greater consistency. Also, a better division might be -made. -.SH HISTORY -This version of fortune is based on the NetBSD fortune 1.4, but with a -number of bug fixes and enhancements. -.PP -The original fortune/strfile format used a single file; strfile read the -text file and converted it to null-delimited strings, which were stored -after the table of pointers in the .dat file. By NetBSD fortune 1.4, -this had changed to two separate files: the .dat file was only the header -(the table of pointers, plus flags; see -.IR strfile.h ), -and the text strings were left in their own file. The potential problem -with this is that text file and header file may get out of synch, but the -advantage is that the text files can be easily edited without resorting -to unstr, and there is a potential savings in disk space (on the -assumption that the sysadmin kept both .dat file with strings and the -text file). -.PP -Many of the enhancements made over the NetBSD version assumed a Linux -system, and thus caused it to fail under other platforms, including BSD. -The source code has since been made more generic, and currently works on -SunOS 4.x as well as Linux, with support for more platforms expected in -the future. Note that some bugs were inadvertently discovered and fixed -during this process. -.PP -At a guess, a great many people have worked on this program, many without -leaving attributions. -.SH SEE ALSO -.BR re_comp "(3), " regcomp "(3), " strfile "(1), " -.BR unstr (1)